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Protesters demand Palestinian justice outside Jared Kushner's house

By Xiaozhang (Shaw) Wan, Medill News Service
White House advisor Jared Kushner has been instrumental in working on a peace plan for Israel and Palestinians. File Photo by Kevin Dietsch/UPI
White House advisor Jared Kushner has been instrumental in working on a peace plan for Israel and Palestinians. File Photo by Kevin Dietsch/UPI | License Photo

WASHINGTON -- Protesters rallied outside the house of White House adviser Jared Kushner on Thursday to demand Palestinians' right to return to their homes as part of any peace agreement between Israel and Palestine.

"We are here to protest Jared Kushner's oncoming peace plans that won't include justice," said Ariel Gold, national co-director of CODEPINK and organizer of the rally. "There can be no peace without the Palestinian right to return to the homes and lands they have been displaced from since 1948."

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President Donald Trump and his advisers, led by Kushner, have been working on a Middle East peace plan since last year.

The nearly three dozen protesters gathered at the Islamic Center of Washington, then marched the one block to Kushner's house in the Kalorama neighborhood. They said they chose this place for a reason.

"We're here outside Kushner's home to reach him and also, as he sits comfortably in his home, Palestinians continue to be displaced from their homes and land," Gold said.

Most of the protesters had a photo hanging from their necks of one of the 146 people who died in Palestinian protests from March 30 to May 15, which marked the 70-year anniversary of the Nakba, the 1948 Palestinian war and the relocation of the U.S. Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem on May 14. They tied the photos to Kushner's fence at the end of the rally.

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Amal Jalada, who lost a young relative in the protests, cried during the rally when she saw his picture.

"I feel very sad," she said. "Everybody in the family was sad for him because he was a very sweetheart guy."

Jalada's grandparents and parents were forced to leave Jaffa because of the Nakba, she said.

"They thought that they would leave temporarily. They took the key of their home with them. They thought they would return when the war ended. But the war never ended until today," Jalada said. "We want to return to our homes because we have memories, we have properties and we have the right," she said.

Nadia Itraish, a Washingtonian originally born in Palestinian Jerusalem, believed she "was born with a cause and that cause is to bring freedom to Palestine and the Palestinians."

Being a Palestinian America, Itraish thought the story of the Palestinian people is very similar to that of Native Americans in the United States.

"However, we want to ensure that the Palestinians' story ends in a happy one."

Itraish came to the rally with a message -- "We are determined to have what is our right, returning to our homeland in Palestine. And we want to do so in peace."

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